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Created by modifying "Fukui Yokokan Garden" (C) Fukui City
(Licensed under CC BY 4.0 )
JFS Newsletter No.179 (July 2017)
Image by yuki5287. Some Rights Reserved.
Kitakyushu City is located at the northern end of the island of Kyushu on the western side of the Japanese archipelago, and has developed into one of Japan's leading heavy industrial areas and international trade ports in modern times. This is after it experienced serious pollution problems caused by industrial wastewater and air pollution in the 1960s. The municipal government worked very hard together with businesses and citizens to solve the problems. For its efforts to create a low-carbon society, the city was selected in July 2008 to be an Eco-Model City and in December 2011 to be a Future City (two environmental city programs by the Japanese government). Based on its past experience, Kitakyushu can now draw upon its significant resources in pollution control technologies, 3Rs (reduce, reuse and recycle) experience, and energy-efficiency technologies.
Efforts by Eco-Models in Japan -- Part 2
http://www.japanfs.org/en/news/archives/news_id029000.html
To help conserve the threatened global environment and create a sustainable society by mobilizing these resources for use around the world, Kitakyushu City opened the Asian Center for Low-Carbon Society in June 2010. This month's JFS Newsletter features Kitakyushu's efforts to promote a low-carbon society in Asia through environmental business approaches.
Copyright 2017 Miwako Hosoda All Rights Reserved.
Tohoku Fukko Nikki (Tohoku Reconstruction Diary), a weekly feature in the Tokyo Shimbun newspaper, delivers news stories on reconstruction efforts in communities devastated by the earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan in March 2011. The articles are written by the JKSK Yui-Yui Project, an initiative to support survivors of the 2011 disaster by the non-profit organization JKSK Empowering Women Empowering Society. This time, we present an article published in the February 14, 2017, issue that describes the need for individuals to take action.
I learned from the previous article that Sachiko Bamba, a representative of the Veteran Mothers' Society, relied on a members-only social network site rather than mass media for accurate information about the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant accident. She worked not with personnel from the government or organizations, but with individuals taking action independently.
There are limits to how much one can do with existing knowledge when you need to deal with extraordinary situations like disasters. Especially like in 2011 when multiple unexpected disasters (earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident) struck at the same time, we should follow not only the usual disaster response procedures, we also need individuals with a high level of expertise who can take the initiative on their own.
When citizens received messages through social networking systems that medical facilities were not functioning in Hama-dori region of Fukushima, a region within a 30 kilometer radius from the damaged nuclear plant, they asked themselves what they could do to help, and contacted medical institutions. Responding to their call, medical professionals and experts from around Japan went to the region. They stayed in the affected areas to identify their needs and carried out actions to address them. From here, spontaneous cooperation developed among people who had the motivation to take action.
Japan is now facing significant changes. Due to the growing aging population, decreasing birth rates and greater diversity of lifestyles, there is a rapid increase in the number of cases where issues cannot be resolved by simply relying on the standard solutions. One of the difficulties Sachiko Bamba faced was closing down of the hospital she usually goes to due to a shortage of nurses. This can happen anywhere and not only in disaster-stricken areas.
In fact, the solutions to issues in disaster-stricken areas can serve as models to cope with issues facing many other regions of Japan, including declines in population, shortages of healthcare workers, and changes in industrial structure. While the 2011 earthquake and tsunami brought to surface the rigidity of many of today's social systems, it also highlighted the strength of communities. The experiences of the Tohoku region certainly provide important lessons for the future of all regions.
Miwako Hosoda
Vice President
Seisa University
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